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Action research in Chinese classroom – an initiative

JANE WOO & PAN LIN

JUNE 2017

What is research?

What is action research?

What is action research?“Action research is a form of collective self-reflective enquiry undertaken by participants in social situations in order to improve the rationality and justice of their own social or educational practices, as well as their understandings of these practices and the situations in which these practices are carried out…”

Kemmis & McTaggart (1988:5)

“Action Research is a democratic and participative orientation of knowledge production. It brings together action and reflection, theory and practice, in the pursuit of practical solutions to issues of pressing concern. Action research is a pragmatic creation of knowledge with, not on, about, people.”

Bradbury, H. (2015, in Tsokova, 2017)

“Action research is a form of collective self-reflective enquiry undertaken by participants in social situations in order to improve the rationality and justice of their own social or educational practices, as well as their understandings of these practices and the situations in which these practices are carried out…”

Kemmis & McTaggart (1988:5)

“Action Research is a democratic and participative orientation of knowledge production. It brings together action and reflection, theory and practice, in the pursuit of practical solutions to issues of pressing concern. Action research is a pragmatic creation of knowledge with, not on, about, people.”

Bradbury, H. (2015, in Tsokova, 2017)

Key features of action research

External expert

Active, relational participation

Improvement in practices & settings

Problems/challenges

• How do I react when students give me the wrong answers?

• When I intend to help students, do I in fact help them?

• What do my students think of my way of conducting an oral test? What are their preferences?

Her questionsJun Da’s problems

A teacher of Mandarin Chinese for adult learners at SOAS

Negative feeling about the oral tests she used in class

Why do action research? – Dr. Pan Lin

Jun Da’s actions:

• She kept a diary to explore her feelings of uneasiness.

• She recorded a number of oral tests.

• She gave students a questionnaireto investigate their preferences and difficulties in oral tests.

• She asked students for written feedback after the test.

Jun Da’s self-observation:

• Too many questions at the same time

• Frequent interruptions

• Feedback: ”No, I actually wanted you to tell me ...” (不,我是想问你—— )

I don't like being interrupted all the time without having the possibility of carrying forward what I want to say.

Action research as reflective practice

Students’ response:

Being passive. When the teacher talks too much.

The questions "in bursts", without being given the time to answer.

Jun Da’s Reflections

Give students the questions for the oral test five minutes before answering.

Restrict her interventions to a minimum.

When interviewing, paraphrase what students say to help them keep the thread of their thoughts, search their memory or trigger off new ideas.

Students’ commentsI felt helped when the teacher repeated what I had said. This helped me reformulate my thoughts more clearly. (Andy)

I appreciate the fact that you didn't interrupt me while I was talking and that you tried to help when I had difficulties, and the fact that you were listening attentively to what I was saying, while encouraging me to go on. (Donna)

What I liked in the oral test was the fact that you didn't interrupt me while I was speaking. (Cath)

Plan Revised Plan

Observe Observe

Cycle 1 Cycle 2

Action research: processes

• Asks intentionalquestions about teaching and learning

• Focuses on a specific area of inquiry and engages in reflection

• Benefits from ongoing collaboration and support of critical friends

• Asks questions about teaching and learning

• Collects information about students

• Often feels overwhelmed or isolated

To facilitate teaching and learning and maximizes

student potential

Teacher Teacher Researcher

Teacher vs Teacher Researcher

Action research?

I’ve got so much marking to do

Nah, it’s too difficult.

I haven’t got time.

It’s for the academics.

It’s only for clever people.

Action research?

The timescale is entirely up to me,

woo hoo! I know best!

Difficult? Think again…

Jane’s action research Plan

Chinese characters, pinyin or image first?

Action Intervention

Self-efficacy tests

Observe Before & after

Reflect Orthographic

awareness

Revise plan

(Me, 2017)

Plan Same ability

High & low abilityTeacher & student Action

Audio recording

Observe NO teacher

YES same ability

Reflect More confidence in

grouping arrangement

Revise plan

Action research case study

(Richards & Lockhart, 1994)

Grouping arrangement for less able students

Ethical issues in action research Keep people informed

purpose, benefits, rationale

Seek permission

Head of department / Head teacher / parents?

Confidential and sensitive issues

identity, voluntary participation, right of withdrawal

Sample consent formSSS

Confident or Not Confident?

Group activity

Useful websites / organisations❖IOE Confucius Institute research

https://ciforschools.wordpress.com/research/

❖Chartered College for Teaching https://www.collegeofteaching.ac.uk/

❖Taylor and Francis educational action research http://tandfonline.com/toc/reac20/current

❖Association for Language Learning (ALL) researchhttps://www.all-languages.org.uk/languages-today/the-big-idea-action-research/

❖Colleges/universities affiliated to your school

Reading listBrydon‐Miller, M. & Maguire, P. (2009) Participatory action research: Contributions to the development of practitioner inquiry in education. Educational Action Research, 17(1), pp.79-93.

Carr, W. and Kemmis, S. (1986) Becoming critical: Education, knowledge and action research. London: Falmerpress.

Elliott, J. (1978) What is action research in schools?. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 10 (4), pp.355-357.

Hopkins, D. (2014) A Teacher's Guide to Classroom Research (5th ed). Maidenhead: Open University Press.

Hitchcock, G. & Hughes, D. (1995) Research and the teacher: A qualitative introduction to school-based research (2nd ed). London: Routledge.

Kemmis, S. (2010) What is to be done? The place of action research. Educational Action Research, 18(4), pp.417-427.

Kemmis, S., McTaggert, R. & Nixon, R. (2014) The action research planner: Doing critical participatory action research. Singapore: Springer.

McNiff, J. (2002). Action research: Principles & practice. London: Macmillan.

Schön, D. (1983) The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action. New York: Basic Books.

Stenhouse, L. (1975) An introduction to curriculum research and development. London: Heinemann Educational.

Somekh, B., & Zeichner, K. (2009) Action Research for educational reform: Remodelling action research theories and practices in local contexts. Educational Action Research, 17(1), pp.5-21.

Zeni, J. (1998) A guide to ethical issues and action research. Educational Action Research, 6(1), pp.9-19.

“If ‘what works’ doesn’t

always work, how do we

make good choices?” (CCT, 2017:8)

“The role of school-based research is clear; it gives

schools the chance to better understand the specific needs

and characteristics of their own setting”

(CCT, 2017:21)

谢谢,再见!

References Kemmis, S. & McTaggart, R. (eds) (1988) The Action Research Planner (3rd ed). Victoria: Deakin University Press.

Redhill Teaching School Alliance. (2014) Doing your own research: A guide to carrying our small-scaled classroom-based research. [Online] Available from: http://www.redhilltsa.org.uk/course/view.php?name=Research [Accessed 1 February 2017]

Tsokova, D. (2017) Introduction to action research. PowerPoint presentation, UCL IOE.

Chartered College of Teaching. (2017) Impact: Interim issue May 2017. Journal of the Chartered College of Teaching.

Richards, J.C. & Lockhart, C. (eds) (1994) Reflective teaching in second language classrooms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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